Annual Report 2011-12 | Page 28

Student Characteristics Students Enrolled by Grade Level Carlos Rosario School ESL students are placed according to their level of English proficiency. Student Re-Enrollment The majority of students eligible for re-enrollment (85.6%) enrolled in fall 2011. The School maintained its minimum enrollment of 1,750 students throughout the school year. Demand for classes remained constant. As Carlos Rosario School was oversubscribed (new applicants outnumbered spaces available for classes), the school held an enrollment lottery and established a lottery waiting list of over 320 students for the day, afternoon, and evening sessions. In addition, a regular waiting list of more than 1,000 students was also kept for applicants seeking enrollment after the enrollment periods had ended. Demographics (Race, gender, ethnicity, ELL status, special ed status, FARM status, alternative risk status) During the 2011-2012 academic year, the Carlos Rosario School offered more than 2,900 students an array of programs and supportive services. These Below: A student listens for her word in the evening rounds of the annual school Spelling Bee. learners comprised an ethnically, geographically, and linguistically diverse student body, with students coming from 90 countries and speaking 36 different languages. Please see the map on the following pages for more information about the countries of origin of our students. The charts on the following pages offer a demographic breakdown. This school year 92% of our student population was limited or non-English proficient. We had no special education students. As a public charter school serving adults, the Carlos Rosario School cannot participate in the National Free Lunch Program and does not receive Title I funding. However, ninety percent of our student population qualifies as low income according to the Department of Agriculture, Federal Poverty Guidelines. For the 2011-12 school year we had less than 10 students with 504 plans and no students who would be defined as homeless according to the age limitations outlined in the McKinney-Vento Act. The data on pregnant students and mothers as well as the number of incarcerated students does not to apply to the School due to its status as an adult education school. Attendance (In-seat attendance, average daily attendance) During the 2011-2012 school year, the school’s in-seat attendance and average daily attendance were both 80.1%. Below: Students from Ethiopia, China, and El Salvador work on a class exercise. 1 29